On Jan 21, 2011, at 4:23 PM, Michael Holstein wrote:
I'd be curious to see what effects (if any) those who use GPS-disciplined NTP references in Southeastern Georgia see from this experiment.
Aren't CDMA BTS clocked off GPS?
NTP isn't going to be the only "ripple".
Regards,
Michael Holstein Cleveland State University
Possibly relevant section from Agilent Designing and Testing 3GPP W-CDMA Base Transceiver Stations (Including Femtocells) Application Note 1355 1.15 Asynchronous cell site acquisition One of the W-CDMA design goals was to remove the requirement for GPS synchronization. Without dependence on GPS, the system could potentially be deployed in locations where GPS is not readily available, such as in a basement of a building or in temporary locations. W-CDMA accomplishes this asynchronous cell site operation through the use of several techniques. First, the scrambling codes in W-CDMA are Gold codes, so precise cell site time synchronization is not required. There are, however, 512 unique Gold codes allocated for cell site separation that the UE must search through. To facilitate this task, the SSC in the S-SCH channel is used to instruct the UE to search through a given set of 64 Gold codes. Each set represents a group of eight scrambling codes (64 x 8 = 512). The UE then tries each of the eight codes within each code group, in an attempt to decode the BCH. The ability to recover the BCH information (system frame number) completes the synchronization process. James R. Cutler james.cutler@consultant.com